Pictured above are Larry Cassidy and his son Larson, who will be taking part in the Great Cycle Challenge to fight Kids Cancer. Cancer is the biggest killer of kids from disease in the USA; 38 children die every week. Please donate now and support his challenge to fight kids’ cancer! Enlarge Photo By Anonymous — Wednesday, June 19th, 2019
This June, I am taking part in the Great Cycle Challenge to fight kids' cancer! Why? Because right now, cancer is the biggest killer of children from disease in the United States. Over 15,700 children are diagnosed every year, and sadly, 38 children die of cancer every week. Kids should be living life, not fighting for it. So I am raising funds through my challenge to help these kids and support Children's Cancer Research Fund to allow them to continue their work to develop lifesaving treatments and find a cure for childhood cancer. Please support me by making a donation to give these kids the brighter futures they deserve. Your support will change little lives. Thank you, To donate, please visit https://greatcyclechallenge.com/Riders/LarryCassidy About The Great Cycle Challenge Here are just some of the key stats so far this month: 80,209 riders are taking part from every state in the country. 144,292 individual donations have been received to support your efforts. $7,489,619 has been raised (so far) making this year's event the biggest EVER in the global history of the challenge. WOW. Together, we've logged 180,079 rides and ridden a total of 2,496,885 miles which is the equivalent of pedaling for 7,928 days (non-stop). On the other side, over those 19 days you've been riding in the challenge: 817 American families have heard the painful words, "your child has cancer." We've lost 95 children to this terrible disease. |
Photo of the Week "Baldwin steam engine #14 approaching the Santa Clara River Valley Railroad Historical Society’s turntable" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Canon 7DMKII camera, manual mode, Tamron 16-300m lens @16mm. Exposure; ISO 4000, aperture f/13, 1/250 second shutter speed. Enlarge Photo By Bob Crum — Wednesday, June 19th, 2019
Noise & Histograms!
I previously mentioned that my readership is presently 2,397,602. Max Z. wrote to challenge the number. Also, in my previous column, I mentioned histograms and some got hysterical. Reader Larry A., emailed me telling me that I was rude introducing a technical term without an explanation. OK, I'll explain! Photography is an art form and a digital image or print is the artistic expression. But a little camera technical know-how helps one create the desired photograph. One great aid is the camera's histogram. While deceptively simple at first glance, a histogram contains a wealth of image information. However, it will not tell you whether or not your composition is compelling or provide the Power Ball winning numbers! A. Make a photo and chimp the shot. (remember chimping from last week?) B. Push your camera's “Info” button. Voila, the histogram! It quickly tells you the light levels of the exposure in graph form. The histogram plots light (luminosity) levels from black – the left end (wall) of the histogram – to pure white – the right side (wall) of the graph. A perfect histogram rises gently from the left cresting in the midsection and gradually drops to the right, indicating a full range of tones from C# to B-flat. Oops, I mean luminosity tones. By not hitting either wall, the histogram indicates that there's no loss of detail in shadows or in the highlights. Celebrate! Your exposure is sweet. A histogram bunched up at the right wall is a high-key image. Spikes at the right wall indicates burned-out (clipped) highlights, i.e., no detail in the highlights. Not good. But note that the sun is so bright that it will spike at the right wall. A histogram hitting the left wall indicates underexposure with blacks clipped, meaning no detail in the shadows. Not good. Mostly. Now revel in your new histogram expertise. Roger M. wrote insisting that the ISO of 10000 of last week's photo of the week is a typo. It's not! However, he's right to question the number. An ISO that high is almost always unacceptably degraded. Generally speaking, an ISO higher than about 1500 will begin to show noise. Image noise appears as random specks and when excessive, significantly degrades image quality. At 10000, there should be so much digital noise that it should look like it was snowing. At an ISO of 10000, why isn't there noise apparent in the photo? The secret is deft post-processing (editing). With two computer software programs and and two plugins, I utilize a three-step process to eliminate as much noise (image specks) as possible. But the process requires patience because noise reduction typically decreases image sharpness and tends to dull detail. The process is like a do-si-do dance, a delicate balance of noise reduction while maintaining image detail and contrast. Not always easily accomplished. Get it all right and voila, a magnificent image sans noise. Even in problematic event light, I can usually maintain a shutter speed sufficient to compensate for camera shake, and hold the aperture at f/8 through f/11 for depth of field and not worry about how high in ISO auto mode it has to go for a proper exposure because I'm can usually salvage the image from excessive noise in post-processing. Keyword: Usually. It doesn't always work. Photo of the week is steam engine #14 heading for the Santa Clara Valley Railroad Historical Society's turntable during a media photo op. Happy photoing! Send comments, questions or suggestions to: focusonphotgraphy@earthlink.net |
By Anonymous — Thursday, June 13th, 2019
On Thursday, June 6th at 9:49 p.m., Fillmore Fire and Ventura County Sheriff received a call of a traffic collision at 405 River Street. Units arrived on scene at 9:54 p.m. to find one vehicle crashed into a parked car. No injuries occurred. Sheriff’s conducted a field sobriety test. The crash was not a result of alcohol. Area residents came outside to investigate after hearing the impact. Photos courtesy Ventura County News Crew. Enlarge Photo |
By Bob Crum — Wednesday, June 12th, 2019
Part 1 of 3
Fillmore’s 2019 Graduating Class marched onto the high school field for the last time on Thursday, June 6th, after their final bus ride. Two hundred and fifty-six seniors waved to family and friends, who packed the bleachers, as the FHS band played Pomp and Circumstance, directed by Greg Godfrey. Principle John Wilber welcomed the students and visitors before Susie Garcia sang the National Anthem. ASB President Ariana Schieferle led the crowd in the Pledge of Allegiance. Senior Class President Ricky Cadena, Valedictorian Damian Meza, and FHS teacher Debra Hoffman all spoke. Live music was performed by Mariachi Los Rayos, before the Presentation of Awards by District Superintendent Dr. Adrian Palazuelos. Presentation of Class was made by John Wilber, with Presentation of Diplomas by school counselors Ronda Reyes-Deutsch and Dena Wyand, and Board of Education members Scott Beylik, Kellie Couse, Virginia De La Piedra, Sean Morris, and Lucy Rangel. The school alma mater was performed by the FHS Band, and Tassel Ceremony was led by Salutatorian Andres Romero. Photos by Bob Crum. Enlarge Photo |
By Bob Crum — Wednesday, June 12th, 2019
Part 2 of 3
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By Bob Crum — Wednesday, June 12th, 2019
Part 3 of 3
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By Anonymous — Wednesday, June 12th, 2019
On Wednesday, June 5th, at 10 a.m., three new Military Banners were installed. Family and friends came out for the dedication. Pictured above are the banners for Matthew Stanwood (USMC), Chris Berrington (Navy), and Mikey Arredondo (Navy), with their family and friends Kassondra Stanwood, Julie Gurkweitz, Bud Gurkweitz, Joe Gosser, Jo-Ellen Poston, Caroline Gurkweitz, Domitri Gurkweitz, Jan Chennault, John Berrington, Stacey Berrington, Nancy Cottrell, Garrett Swetman, Wyatt Swetman, Emmett Swetman, and Station 27 Fire Fighters. Enlarge Photo |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, June 12th, 2019
Nova Storage has completed its construction and is holding a Grand (Re)Opening on Thursday, June 20, 2019, from 12pm to 2 pm. Ribbon cutting ceremony will be followed by delicious food, fun photo booth and fabulous prizes, including gift cards, Dodger tickets, FREE Storage and much more! Come join the fun!! Nova was founded in 1978 when San Fernando native Larry Layne opened North Valley Storage in Mission Hills beside the I-5 Freeway. Nova’s second property opened in the mid-1980’s, in Sylmar on Foothill Blvd. The company later expanded into new locations in Downey, South Gate, Lynwood and Gardena. Throughout its 38 years of operating in diverse communities in Los Angeles County, Nova has made a commitment to investing in the communities it serves by supporting local schools, chambers of commerce, hospitals, and service organizations through sponsorship, referral programs, membership, charitable donations, and volunteer efforts. Last year Nova sponsored the boys CIF soccer champs and continues to support the Fillmore High School sports programs. Nova Storage Fillmore is their seventh facility. Nova now has over 5,000 tenants who can make online reservations and pay their bill on NovaStorage.com, and enjoy individually alarmed units, tenant protection and now, at some facilities, individual text alerts for unit entry. To learn more about Nova Storage, visit www.NovaStorage.com |